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Remarks on cosmology
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 August 2015
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First, I should like to say something about the use of highly specialized models in cosmology. The Einstein—de Sitter model is a relativistic model in which the cosmical constant and the space-curvature constant are both equated to zero. Likewise, the pressure is assumed to be zero throughout the history of the universe, except perhaps at the initial instant. It is well-known that the first two constants can be determined from observation, if not at present, at any rate as the data are refined in the future. Hence, I think it is a weakness to prejudge the issue and assign a priori values. Nor is it self-evident to me that the pressure must always have been zero even if it is zero now. Composite models, with nonzero pressure at first, followed by a zero-pressure condition, need to be examined.
- Type
- Part V Discrete Sources and the Universe
- Information
- Symposium - International Astronomical Union , Volume 9: Paris Symposium on Radio Astronomy , 1959 , pp. 533 - 535
- Copyright
- Copyright © Stanford University Press 1959
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